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Wednesday, June 10, 2009
Michael Medved :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Death of Capitalism? Don't Bet on It
by Michael Medved
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“A FINE OLD CONFLICT” For the better part of five generations, the enemies of capitalism have been singing lustily to celebrate its imminent demise.

During strikes, demonstrations, May Day parades and other sacred occasions, those who reject and denounce the free market system still raise their clenched fists and solemnly intone the thrilling words of “The Internationale”, worldwide anthem of the socialist movement:

No more tradition’s chains shall bind us,
Arise you slaves no more in thrall!
The earth shall rise on new foundations
We have been nought, we shall be all!

‘Tis the final conflict,
Let each stand in his place
The international soviet
Shall be the human race!
‘Tis the final conflict,
Let each stand in his place
The international working class
Shall be the human race!

As a young teenager in London, Jessica Mitford accompanied her governess to Hyde Park for regular Sunday expeditions to savor radical soapbox oratory and to listen to fervent renditions of this song. Unfortunately, she mistook the repeated references to “the final conflict” to be an invocation of a “fine old conflict.” In fact, she later gave the title “A Fine Old Conflict” to a wry 1977 memoir of her decades-long affiliation with the Communist Party.

For Mitford and other critics of the free market system, their ongoing conflict with capitalism may indeed count as “fine” and “old” but it’s never come close to climactic finality.

The florid text of “The Internationale” came from the pen of transport worker and revolutionary leader Eugene Pottier in June, 1871, two weeks after the collapse of the sixty-day socialist insurrection known as the Paris Commune. Despite the bloody breakdown of his utopian dreams, Pottier felt exhilarated by his personal participation in street fighting amidst the boulevard barricades; as he poetically proclaimed in his celebrated song: “Justice thunders condemnation: a better world’s in birth!”

For a hundred and forty years, Pottier’s fellow visionaries have eagerly awaited that promised delivery, expecting the rapid unraveling of the profit-motive economic system that ultimately reached its most powerful, influential expression in the United States of America. Even among the reigning elites of that bourgeois Republic, young radicals of the ‘60’s believed that their own insurrectionary adventures in the Ivy League could bring the nation’s business crashing to a halt. Even at the time, it struck some of us as insanely narcissistic to expect that a boycott of classes or the occupation of administration buildings by a few self-righteous students at Harvard, Columbia and Yale would threaten the productivity and progress of the most prosperous economy in the history of the world.

A generation later, the apocalyptic assumptions of a few expensively educated radicals may seem adolescent, idiotic and altogether unwarranted but no more so, surely, than the ubiquitous proclamations of capitalism’s demise by the heavy-breathing doomsayers of left and right in our very own Age of Obama. Shortly after the presidential election of 2008, filmmaker Michael Moore appeared on the Larry King Show on CNN to announce a transition of cosmic importance. “And I think, really, what we’re seeing now, we’re seeing the end of capitalism,” cackled the portly provocateur. “The end of capitalism as we know it and I say good riddance. It hasn’t helped the people or the planet.”

On a similar note, Newsweek ran a notorious cover story (February 16, 2009) under the headline: WE ARE ALL SOCIALISTS NOW, suggesting a new consensus regarding the well-deserved demise of the free market economy. A few months later (June 2), USA Today columnist Jonah Goldberg aptly pointed out that even the co-author of that much-discussed piece had abandoned the claim of socialism’s universal acceptance and implicitly returned to the idea that in the United States describing someone with the S-word still represented a savage insult. In an adoring interview with the President of the United States, Newsweek editor Jon Meacham snickered with Mr. Obama over nasty right-wing suggestions that the leader of the free world actually qualified as a “crypto-socialist.”

Actually, conservatives went much further than that, and only rarely bothered with the timid qualifier “crypto.” On March 23rd, National Review ran a cover story under the headline “Our Socialist Future” as the magazine that William Buckley founded to “stand athwart history yelling ‘stop!’” instead seemed oddly (and briefly) resigned to stand aside sighing “we lost.” Glenn Beck, lachrymose and theatrical host of a popular program on Fox News, planned a new book entitled “America’s March to Socialism” and often illustrated his TV show with archival footage of goose-stepping hordes in Red Square or Beijing. On a more thoughtful note, columnist Daniel Henninger asked the dreaded question in an April 2 headline in the Wall Street Journal: “Is This the End of Capitalism?” He answered his own query with a resounding ‘no,’ explaining: “Capitalism didn’t tank the U.S. economy. Overbuilt housing did.”

“ONLY A MATTER OF TIME….”

All of the dire and portentous talk about the current “Crisis of Capitalism” carries with it an inescapably familiar, even shopworn feel for all those familiar with recent history. In the “Camelot” era of 1962, African-American activist Malcom X unequivocally announced: “It is impossible for capitalism to survive, primarily because the system of capitalism needs some blood to suck. Capitalism used to be like an eagle, but now it’s more like a vulture…It’s only a matter of time in my opinion before it will collapse completely.”

During the Great Depression, of course, some of the finest minds of the century expected the weakened economic system to disappear altogether. On the eve of FDR’s 1933 inauguration, theologian Reinhold Niebuhr offered an obituary for the old order, written on the assumption that “capitalism is dying and with the conviction that it ought to die.” A member of Congress expressed similar sentiments the same year, as Tom Amlie, a Wisconsin Republican who later returned to the House as a representative of the Progressive Party, told a convention of radicals that the system had no future because Roosevelt wouldn’t spend the huge sums necessary to “keep it alive.” In any event, he declared that “whether capitalism could be kept going for another period of years or not, it is not worth saving.”

A more influential figure of that era, three-term Minnesota Governor Floyd Bjornstjerne Olson, made the destruction of capitalism even more central to his political persona. When asked by visiting journalists whether he considered himself “radical,” the populist governor with the booming voice and larger-than-life personality liked to shock them by announcing “I’m radical as hell!” In 1934, he addressed the convention of his Farmer-Labor Association (the ancestor of today’s Democratic Farmer Labor Party in Minnesota) and explained that he felt tired of “tinkering and patching” and wanted to change the entire business system in his state. The convention obliged by adopting a platform specifically declaring that “capitalism had failed and that immediate steps must be taken by the people to abolish capitalism in a peaceful and lawful manner, and that a new, sane, and just society must be established; a system in which all the natural resources, machinery of production, transportation and communication shall be owned by the government.” Despite the extreme rhetoric of the platform, Olson won re-election in a landslide. He toyed with the idea of challenging FDR from the left as a third party candidate in 1936, but rejected the idea shortly before he died in office of stomach cancer. He was only 44, and remains a wildly popular figure in Minnesota history and folklore.

In the 1930’s, the assumption that the free market system must quickly fall to pieces became so widespread that intellectuals concentrated many of their arguments on selecting the most promising replacement. Lawrence Dennis, former child evangelist, first lieutenant in World War I and Foreign Service officer, passionately rejected both the communist and socialist alternatives. Instead, he became one of the nation’s most influential advocates for fascism in the style of Hitler or Mussolini. In a letter to a friend he wrote, “I should like nothing better than to be a leader or a follower of a Hitler who would crush or destroy many now in power.” In 1932 he published an influential and much-discussed book entitled “Is Capitalism Doomed?” and then answered his own question with his next release, “The Coming American Fascism.”

THE IRRESISTABLE TIDES OF HISTORY

For many reasons, the commentators, activists and politicians of the 1930’s had far more basis for predicting the end of the free market system than either gloomy conservatives or gleeful leftists in 2009. Most significantly, as the arguments of Lawrence Dennis made clear, developments around the world suggested that the irresistible tides of history favored an international future of Statism. With the unholy trinity of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin riding high in Eurasia, the United States looked increasingly isolated with its capitalist institutions – even as modified and re-arranged and regulated by FDR. Aside from the growing domain of the dictators, huge swaths of the globe had never even developed modern capitalist economies that radicals could reject. China remained paralyzed by a chilling combination of colonialism (both Western and Japanese), feudalism and War Lordism, with Mao’s rebellion already gaining considerable strength. The Japanese Empire ran according to principals of medieval militarism, rejecting the western profit system as soft and corrupt. India remained the “crown jewel” of the British Empire with only the bare rudiments of business development, while colonialism continued to dominate the lives of the vast majority of people in Asia and Africa, with corrupt kleptocracies all but universal in Latin America. Only Canada and a small handful of Western European nations seemed to share the values or economic outlook of the United States and every year brought new progress to the forces of collectivism and dictatorship.

By contrast, the thirty years preceding the economic crisis of 2008-2009 displayed unstoppable momentum in the opposite direction. The embrace of free market ideals became so universal that Francis Fukuyama famously proclaimed “The End of History” in 1992. The world’s two most populous nations, China and India, both pursued radical economic reforms to empower the for-profit private economy and reduce central planning (and control) of the economy. The results for both nations involved unimaginably spectacular and consistent growth, and an unprecedented improvement in living standards for nearly half of humanity. China implacably resisted the long-awaited political reforms to accompany its booming economy, and Russia flirted with one-party rule and showed scant respect for civil liberties, but both nations engaged the world economy in distinctly capitalist terms. Putin’s Russia even experimented (mostly successfully) with a flat tax in a demonstration that should provide encouragement for free marketers everywhere. Other former Communist bloc nations of eastern and central Europe not only flocked to join the European Union and NATO but also developed some of the most vibrant capitalist economies on earth.

The notion that the worldwide economic crisis would lead to a global slide toward socialism ran into populist reality in the first weekend of June, 2009. Voting for the European Parliament expressed a continent-wide rejection of left-wing economic prescriptions, with Center-Right parties crushing their Socialist opponents in every nation (except Greece). In France, Germany and Italy, ruling Center-Right coalitions strengthened their standing with the public, while the opposition conservatives in Britain and Spain gained significant ground. Hungary provided one particularly salient example: candidates of the ruling Socialist Party drew only 17% of the vote, while the right wing opposition party gained 56% (and a far-right anti-Gypsy Party earned an additional 15%). Despite the grim talk of an all-but-inevitable march toward socialism, the recent balloting gives evidences of an international surge toward capitalism. In Canada and Israel, market-oriented coalitions also won recent electoral victories, and only in Latin America (with conspicuous exceptions like Mexico and Columbia) have leftist candidates consistently triumphed.

In the United States, the claim that the election of Barack Obama represents a watershed choice and a decisive realignment looks increasingly tenuous in light of recent polling. The most recent Gallup Poll (in May) to ask respondents to state their party affiliation showed an exact tie between Republicans and Democrats at 32% each, with 34% describing themselves as “independents.” Amazingly enough, even these waffling independents looked evenly divided: when asked to express their preference between the two major parties, these non-partisan participants showed an identical number of Republican and Democratic leaners. These numbers represent a dramatic turnaround from the first month after the ’08 election, with the GOP improving its standing by six points, and the Democrats losing seven points of support.

Such polls will shift quickly and unpredictably in the next months and years but the apparent Republican comeback during the first 140 days of Obama’s presidency (with GOP candidates running ahead in both 2009 governorship races in New Jersey and Virginia) indicate that the American people made no significant ideological shift toward collectivism. Even the President’s stratospheric personal popularity hasn’t produced a reliable majority for the big government reforms he favors. In March, the Pew Research Center asked respondents if we are better off “in a free market economy even though there may be severe ups and downs from time to time.” A reassuring 70% agreed, while only 20% disagreed.

BETTER THAN POLAR BEARS

Fortunately, the future of capitalism rests on a firmer foundation than the vagaries of public polling or even the electoral fates of pro-market candidates and parties. The unprecedented worldwide improvement in living standards in the last century owes everything to the technological innovation, increased productivity and personal choice that characterize economies driven by competition and the profit motive. Beyond political advances or reverses, beyond the variations in the unemployment figures or the foreclosure rate or the Dow Jones, the fundamental changes in the very terms of human life in the last several generations will help to inspire the sort of confidence (and even gratitude) that will protect the capitalist system from widespread public rejection, destruction or dismantling.

Consider the direction of the most basic measure of human welfare and opportunity: life expectancy.

Mean life expectancy stood at only 30 years, worldwide, in 1900. This meant that half of all children born in that year would die on or before their 31st birthday. By 2008, that number had soared to 65 years. In other words, despite the misery and malnutrition and deadly epidemics that afflict the developing world, for all of the six billion human beings on the planet we have more than doubled the expected span of life.

In the United States, a baby born in 1900 could anticipate 47 years of life; by 1950, that number rose to 68 years, and in 2009 it passed a previously unimaginable 78 years.

Put another way, in 1900 American parents with four children (a typical family size at that time) could reasonably expect that at least one of them would die before reaching adulthood. Today, the death of children has become a blessed rarity.

Aside from the figures on health and mortality, consider the difference in the way we live our lives: the opportunity to go on family outings in cars (or airplanes), to enjoy entertainment options unimaginable even to royalty of the nineteenth century, to attend universities, to speak to loved ones on the other side of the continent, to bathe daily, to retain our teeth through old age, to shop in book stores stocked more plentifully than the best-equipped libraries of old, to own spacious homes and to tend gardens – all of this makes us easily the most fortunate generation in human history. The current economic crisis can neither erase nor obscure the overwhelming and ubiquitous evidence of progress.

I personally savored some of that evidence a few weeks ago when I attended a dazzling IMAX 3-D documentary of the breathtaking Disney documentary, “Earth.” Aside from the technological marvels displayed on the screen and through the sound system, the movie’s content left a lasting impression. Culled from hours of nature footage previously featured on the BBC and Discovery Channel, “Earth” provided an intimate examination of every sort of living creature in every corner of the planet. As narrated by James Earl Jones, the film strained to provide personality and drama to the experiences of elephants and polar bears and whales and lions and gazelles. The chief revelation of the film, however, involved the common element that linked each of these complex and magnificent creatures: the fact that they all spent nearly all their waking hours obsessed with food, and in efforts to try to secure the next meal, or to avoid becoming the next meal for someone else. Their only triumphs and tragedies concerned the basic business of consumption – like the emotional highlight of the film, when a weakened, starving polar bear makes a final effort to attack a robust walrus in the hope of devouring his blubbery flesh and drinking his blood.

For most of man’s history, the bulk of humanity lived lives that placed them closer to the food-focused animals than to today’s pampered people with our array of choices, joys, adventures and diversions. Subsistence economies for serfs or peasants or slaves meant that each day represented a struggle to guarantee a meal for self and family. Even in purportedly advanced societies, major portions of the population enjoyed scant time for any activities or initiatives not directly connected to survival.

In 1992, I heard an unforgettable presentation at an Aspen retreat from Baron William Rees-Mogg, a distinguished British journalist and one-time editor of the Times of London. He recalled his own boyhood in the depression when the mass of Britons lived lives only marginally more secure and varied than the struggling polar bears. He estimated the ratio as 80/20 between those who worried and toiled for daily bread while accumulating no wealth and few dreams, and the privileged fifth in the middle class and above with the ability to move up the comfort ladder and provide more for their children. Amazingly, after sixty years, the Baron estimated that in the United Kingdom the ratio had flipped – with 80% now enjoying bourgeois pleasures and opportunities, and only 20% still desperate and destitute.

He argued that the business system of the west could lead the world to a similar transition, altering the mathematics in which the majority of human beings on the planet still battled for life’s basics in 1992.

Amazingly, the last decade and a half brought the realization of his vision, with the overwhelming majority of human-kind now beyond the reach of starvation and avoiding that ferocious, animalistic focus on the next meal. That progress came from capitalist economies, or from socialist nations borrowing and adapting the key capitalist tools.

The frustrations and suffering of the last few months must not bring about a total loss of perspective on our situation. The reverses associated with the financial crisis can’t overwhelm the obvious fact that we enjoy pleasures and privileges and choices all-but-unimaginable to our own grandparents. Capitalism made that possible, and the proposed dismantling of the business system would threaten to send untold millions back to the sustenance struggles of hungry bears and birds.

CHANCES FOR HOPE AND CHANGE

In the last analysis, the prevalent predictions about the free market’s destruction and the coming of a new socialist order amount to a simplistic, childish, ill-informed distortion with unlikely origins in the bad old days of the Cold War.

During the years of “long, twilight struggle” (in JFK’s haunting phrase) serious people divided the developed portions of the planet into “Iron Curtain” vs. “Free World,” communist dictatorships vs. lands of liberty, them vs. us. Some nations insisted on “non-aligned” status (like the maddening Indians with their pacifist and neutralist traditions) but even those bastions of indecision ran the horrible risk of “going communist.”

According to the understanding of the time, when any nation “went communist” and installed puppets of the Soviet Union to positions of real power, the alteration in status became permanent. The Communist agents or dupes might come to power through elections and the manipulation of Democratic institutions, but in many countries that meant “one man, one vote, one time” – with a quick brutal crackdown on all opposition and the rapid establishment of the mechanics of dictatorship.

Future U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick became famous through an article (“Dictatorships and Double Standards,” November, 1979) that talked about the long-term results of Communist takeover. In making the case for the uneasy U.S. alliance with various non-democratic regimes, she emphasized the distinction between “authoritarian” and “totalitarian” dictatorships. In authoritarian nations (like Batista’s Cuba) the government never took full control of all institutions and allowed rival sources of power, thereby admitting possibilities for change. In totalitarian regimes (like Castro’s Cuba) the ruling elite attempted to dominate all political, economic and cultural institutions, allowing no challenge to its all-inclusive power and providing virtually no chance for change.

According to the conventional wisdom of the time, no totalitarian regime had ever released its oppressed populace or evolved toward enlightenment; such nation-states could only be transformed (as with Nazi Germany and Imperial Japan) through the overwhelming application of military force. This meant that once a society “went communist” there was no chance to turn back, and you could count on that nation to work against American interests, follow the Soviet lead, and shun all ideals of liberty and decency.

Such thinking contributed powerfully to the decision to fight both the Korean and the Vietnam Wars, and also impacts the current debate about “our socialist future” and the demise of the free market system. For many worried conservatives, the possibility that the Obama administration will impose a vast expansion of the federal government amounts to the chance that America would “go socialist” – moving definitively and permanently from column A to column B. According to this argument, once the majority of voters grow accustomed to a cornucopia of governmental goodies, it will be impossible to break their addiction, and the irresponsible spending will bring about either the bankruptcy of the federal government or (far more likely) vastly increased and punishing taxes on society’s most productive citizens.

The problem with this line of reasoning is that there is no defined or obvious tipping point in which a nation moves clearly from the sunlight of liberty into the shadows of statist tyranny. There’s also little historical evidence that even the most radical sorts of bureaucratic expansion amount to irreversible change.

Consider the mother country, our friends across the pond in the British Isles. In the 34 years from the end of World War II until the arrival of Margaret Thatcher at 10 Downing Street, the officially socialist Labour Party controlled the government almost precisely half the time. They succeeded in instituting the National Health Service (socialized medicine) and vastly increased spending for public housing and other welfare programs. Did this mean that the United Kingdom had “gone socialist” and couldn’t return to a dynamic market economy?

Fortunately, Mrs. Thatcher didn’t believe in the inevitable loss of British initiative, and in 1979 she set about transforming her country for the better. She didn’t immediately re-establish capitalism any more than her Labour predecessors had firmly established socialism. She did, however, change a mixed economy in a free market direction, in much the same way that Barack Obama means to alter the American economy in a big government, “spread the wealth,” socialist agenda.

All western nations operate with mixed economies, and the mix is different from place to place and from time to time. Switzerland shares a border with Germany, but the two nations offer vastly different economic systems (so that any true lover of liberty will prefer Swiss chocolate to German beer). Ronald Reagan took over the White House directly from Jimmy Carter but he brought vastly different ideas to the table on how to run the nation’s bureaucracy and economy (Reagan believed the economy should, ultimately, run itself). Naturally, it makes a difference when a president attempts to lead the nation in a new direction, but the chief impact of his efforts will be to alter the balance (probably only slightly) between the private and public sectors.

The notion that Europe has become a socialist wasteland with no entrepreneurial energy and no possibility of redemption distorts the continent’s complicated realities. Russell Shorto, an American writer living in Amsterdam, provided a fascinating account of life in the supposedly “socialist” Netherlands for the New York Times Magazine. “It is and has long been a highly capitalistic country,” he writes. “The Dutch pioneered the multinational corporation and advanced the concept of shares of stock and last year the country was the third-largest investor in U.S. businesses—and yet it has what I had been led to believe was a vast, socialistic welfare state.”

Even the top Dutch tax rate of 52% misleads people about one of the Old World’s more prosperous enclaves. Noting that the top federal tax rate in the United States now stands at 35%, Shorto quotes Konstanze Woelfle, an American accountant working in Amsterdam. “People coming from the U.S. to the Netherlands focus on that difference, on that 52%,” she said. “But consider that the Dutch rate includes social security, which in the U.S. is an additional 6.2%. Then in the U.S. you have state and local taxes, and much higher real estate taxes. If you were to add all those up, you could get close to 52%”

And, of course, President Obama may well succeed in raising that figure beyond the Dutch level, but even if he does, the chances for future cuts and reforms remain vibrant. The top tax rate has fluctuated wildly over the years in response to both economic and political pressures --- from 73% under Woodrow Wilson to 24% under Calvin Coolidge, to 92% under Harry Truman, to 70% under John Kennedy, to 28% under Reagan, and then back to 39.6% under Bill Clinton. Though all Americans would benefit from more predictability, rationality and simplicity in the tax code, there’s no reason to assume that the forthcoming rate increases under Barack Obama will be any more permanent than previous alterations.

In any event, we can only damage our effectiveness by misrepresenting the nature of the battles that surely lie ahead. We are fighting against a bone-headed and unaffordable expansion of government by well-meaning but misguided bureaucrats, not the imposition of socialist tyranny by jack-booted thugs. We’re struggling to protect our free market system from damaging intrusion by Washington, D.C., not to defend it against definitive obliteration. If President Obama pushes the system the wrong way (and he will) then it is up to conservatives to push back, rather than wringing hands over the system’s total destruction.

In fighting for smaller government, we fight for more liberty--- not the survival of liberty itself. Yes, that struggle amounts to a “fine old conflict” (which we can ultimately win), but it is by no means The Final Conflict of communist fantasies and conservative nightmares.

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About The Author
Michael Medved's daily syndicated radio talk show reaches one of the largest national audiences every weekday between 3 and 6 PM, Eastern Time. Michael Medved is the author of eleven books, including the bestsellers What Really Happened to the Class of '65?, Hollywood vs. America, Right Turns and, most recently, The Ten Big Lies About America.
 
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Capitalism Always Succeeds

Even if it is only on the black market.


Scrip, anyone?

The poor socialist "democrats"
They have been played like an old fiddle by the Marxists.

The Marxists are the very ones who are doing all the INCORPORATION of Business and Government.

Bringing it all under the control of a few men at the top.

Giving us a TOP HEAVY Government that is crashing down just like all incorporated powers of business and government have done in Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany and Communist Russia.

It will also here in Fascist, Nazi, Communist inspired America, all based in Marxist Politics and NOT Free Markets of Rule of Law.

When a people accept the State as the giver of rights, the State will take their rights.

Immorality of the times has brought bondage back to rule the minds of millions of Americans today


Should say "or"
NOT Free Markets or Rule of Law.

How To Kill The American Economy

Elect Barack Obama, who has:

1. Emptied our Treasury,

2. Borrowed more than any other President in US history,

3. Agreed with Bernanke that the Fed Reserve should print trillions,

4. Named a Pay Tsar, who will one day dictate all salaries and bonuses for Americans,

5. Prompted the Congress to enact "Pay Go", which is code for taxes,

6. Destroyed contract law and the US Constitution,

7. Weakened our AAA credit rating,

8. Named 23 Tsars, who are not accountable to Congress and have the President's authority to raise taxes (which is blatantly unconstitutional),

9. Wants protectionism, which will cause the same problem that happened following the enactment of Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in June 1930, and

10. Will have to raise taxes across the board to pay for his spending because other sources have dried up.

Say hello to Barack Hoover Roosevelt.

we had been taking small
incremental steps towards socialism. With Obama, the steps are great leaps. I don't see Republicans having what it takes to reverse this trend. When they got into power, they took smaller steps in the same socialist direction, while mouthing conservative platitudes. How many federal departments and programs have been eliminated? Where is the future? I fear that this rush to socialism might inspire some home grown terrorism. What do the people who invested in GM bonds or lost dealerships for no good reason place their anger when they realize we no longer live under the rule of law? How many Timothy McVeighs are out there plotting right now? I fear that ten years from now, we will not recognize this country.

Mr. Medved
I appreciate your article. It is one of the best accounts of capitalism and the advantages it produces for all of mankind that I have ever read. I wish I could be as optimistic as you.

I see, though, not socialism but fascism in place and gaining ground. Rather than taking over all manufacturing, health care, banking and finance, etc., those in charge are kind enough to keep all of that the property of the owners, they just call all the shots. Pay scales, product choices, profit levels, tax brackets, everything. Obama announced today that a new push for national health might do away with fast food outlets.

What is there about this that promises capitalisms survival?

Glenn Flowers
http://glnnflwrs.blogtownhall.com/

St. Denis - Capitalism Always Succeeds .

Quite so. Capitalism is inherent to human beings, as it is the economic corollary to individual liberty. Trade predates written history. Governments without the wit to recognize reality can at worst drive capitalism underground. It cannot be stopped, any more than the desire for freedom can be erased from humanity.

Government run Markets
Is not Free Enterprise, as all of us know.

What the democrats are supporting from Government they would not tolerate in their own lives or homes.

One person makes all the rules for everyone else in what they drive, eat or work at.

Not a single individual ever lived who is socialist by nature.
He is a unique human being that is the only one like him/her in the history of the world.
A special person, having the liberty of self determination and happiness.

Socialism can only exist by force, and being part of a Party of like minded individuals.

They must all think alike to join this party, cause it does not come by instinct, but by authoritarian abuse.

No person ever existed who worked hard and took his gains to distribute around his neighborhood or city.

Its against our nature to join a political movement that steals another persons gains and give it to anyone else, deserving or not.

If the Government has the legal right to take from one and give to another, then we all must have the right to do the same.

You see something you want and are big enough to take it, its yours.

Capitalism is founded in Natural Law, not Party Politics as all socialism.

Some areas of common needs make some social programs a benefit for all, but we are seeing it taken to steal, which is a crime even if its government that does it.

Been many illegal governments judged under the Natural Law America was Established in

Oh, vey!

Eighty-three percent (83%) of voters nationwide rate the U.S. Constitution as good or excellent, and there is little public support for changing the document.

However, the latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey found that 44% believe the Constitution doesn't place enough restrictions on the government. Only 10% hold the opposite view and say the nation’s governing charter places too many restrictions on government. Thirty-eight percent (38%) say the balance is about right.



Oh, vey! After some more fiats from the Totalitarian-in-Chief, those 38% will join the 44%.

So much for "positive rights"!

Sorry
This is not capitalism anymore. This is Marxism. The worst part is that Americans are seemingly blind to the slavery being wrought upon them. The radical left wing loons are just as excited as can be. After all, when you are so pathetic and lazy that you are unwilling to become educated or unable or unwilling to make it in the work force and you end up finally resigning or justifying to yourself that you're gonna be a poor slob the rest of your miserable little life, the best you can do is work to tear down the success of others. "THEY" must have done it to you. "The rich guy kept you down". That, my friends is the entire platform of the Obama administration. Pander to the lowest common denominator.

Black Markets work.

Black markets are very common in Europe. It is believed the only thing keeping Italy afloat is its black markets bringing needed cash into the economy. (Leave it to the Italians.)

Black Markets are also common with our Food Stamp program. Mothers who are suppose to use food stamps to obtain food for their children will often trade-in stamps to drug dealers getting 50 cents on the dollar.

Recently some high school kids were using free condoms they got from school nurse and were selling them to prostitutes on the street for spending money.

I have seen teachers loading into their private autos boxes of federally funded school lunches for their own personal use or profit.

So clearly we can see Liberals do not fully understand how capitalism works.

One reason Liberals oppose capitalism is because its competative. Notice Liberals tend to gravitate toward occupations and profession where hard work and skill are not measurements of succes.

Every Hollywood actor know another actor who has more skill, has worked harder and has not achieve the same success. A good teacher makes just as much money as a bad teacher, Good medical doctors make pretty much the same as bad doctors with few exceptions, Government workers all make the same pay for the same job classification. In an effort to compensate for this, Liberals tend to hand out awards and hold banquets honoring those with similar points of views. Accomplishment has little value its all about being politically correct.

system
Capitalism has always been with us, since the days of the cave man and throughout history.
Socialism on the other hand is a decadent system dreamed up by lazy people who want to leach off others, this keeps them from having to work.
Even the two largest countrys that have tried it have given up, realizing it is hopelessly flawed.

Thank you Mr. Medved
Socialists will never understand Capitalism. Socialists always think and believe that government planners, bureaucrats and other malcontents can make better decisions than individual entrepeneurs. It just ain't so!

Conservatism and capitalism can not die
because they are ideas. Collectivism will not die either, for the same reason. But collectivism is the dream of ignorant fools. pr the tool of power-hungry megalomaniacs. It has never worked, though often tried, so only fools sincerely advocate it. But the collection of power into a government appeals to those who dream of weilding that power.

Capitalism's greatest strength
is that it takes into account HUMAN NATURE and both Communism and Socialism run COUNTER to human nature. Freedom and liberty are the natural condition and yearning of the human spirit.

The desire to improves one's lot in life through legal means without having to ask permission is at the heart of capitalism. The individual not only does not matter under socialism and Marxism but is considered "contrary to the common good" or in other words the good of the STATE. Stalin made a long speech on that subject in fact.

-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

Brilliant Essay
Those who don't like capitalism, but have benefited from it for decades, are displaying their ignorance of what makes men/women tick. Anyone can succeed and reach highest levels in capitalism....not so in socialism...there are no high levels anymore. Therefore, I conclude that those who think ill of capitalism are jealous of those who have achieved greatly...and are unhappy with their mediocrity and lack of motivation. So be it!

Spoken like a true Cajun!!!
Great post Karen. No mincing of even a syllable!! Love it. I like to describe the difference between a capitalist and socialist thusly:

A guy drives down the street in a fancy sports car. The capitalist watches and thinks "One day I'll own a car just like that!" the socialist thinks "One day I'll drag that greedy pig down into the gutter with me!"


-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

Scholars work Mr. Medved.
It was solid that you began with the reference to Ms. Mitford and trailed into the discussion of Ms. Thatcher’s reversal of the 30 years of interventionist governments in England.

Your article reminded me of many things that speak to ‘socialist man’ and the societies that have lived, ‘labored’ and thrown-off those interventionist bridles.

I harkened to playwright Alan Bennett’s rip-roarious screenplay for “A Private Function”, where the strictures of rationing in post war, Labour governed England and British socialism and its creep to the totalitarians were skewered as well as anything since Eric Blair put pen to “1984.”

Fine read Sir … I’ll recommend it to many.

This week past, I emailed your site at the link available here at Townhall, a request that you look at the film, “The Limits of Control”, the latest work of filmmaker Jim Jarmusch.

The work is an anti-American film that in its sub-text and plot line celebrates and justifies 9-11. If you are able to see my email on the subject I believe you will be stimulated to examine the work and discuss it publically.

Crony Capitalism vs. Savior Socialism
We've seen both Democrats and Republicans cough up billions from taxpayers to bail out the corruption, incompetence, and off-the-books-gambling of Wall Street parasites and CEO's as they take millions in bonuses. Rick Wagonner from GM got a $20 Million dollar Bonus for being fired after he wrecked GM. Many on Wall street received HUNDRED OF MILLION$ IN BONU$E$ EVEN THOUGH THEY LOST MONEY FOR INVESTORS.

Obviously Capitalism does not work. Without bailouts, massive public deception, and constant book cooking, and offshoring workers, Capitalism would fall on its face and the economy would totally tank.

Capitalism simply cannot work in a modern state because it is based on 19th century ideals of Master/serf relationships which are no onger acceptable to Americans. If Capitalism worked the government would not need to tamper with it constantly to keep a failed machine running.

We've also seen in Europe that Socialism has worked brilliantly protecting shareholders better, providing affordable high quality healthcare, more vacations, producing higher worker output and efficiency in France, and providing economic justice to workers so they can have a higher standard of living than U.S. citizens.Those who've visited Sweden, Norway, Germany or France can see how the average quality of life is better than for U.S. citizens.

While Capitalism was fine at the beginning of the 19th Century, we see it is a dinosaur of inefficiency and injustice in the modern world, and cannot compare to the superiority of Socialism.

Capitalism is in the process of being replaced because it has failed and Americans are not satisfied that they've been ripped off, work harder, yet fall further and further behind with more debt. That's why Republican crony Capitalists were landslided. They continue to cling to a failed ideology that is incompatible with the realities of the 21st. century.

Ever notice....
these particularly bad Republicans and Democrats come in pairs? Hoover/Roosevelt, Johnson/Nixon, Bush/Obama. Ultimately, these two parties are going to have to be broken up. There truly isn't a dime's difference between them.

No Such Thing As Savior Socialism

Socialism, even with a smiley face like fascism, is just another form of Marxism. All roads lead to Communism.

Capitalism isn't going anywhere, First. It will continue to flourish regardless of what your side does. You will not destroy it. It may have to operate in the alleys and dark corners where the blackmarket flourishes, but it will last. And, one day, it will come back and with a vengeance and crush socialism, in all of its forms.

Take my words to the bank.

Churchill On Socialism

"No socialist government conducting the entire life and industry of the country could afford to allow free, sharp, or violently worded expressions of public discontent. They would have to fall back on some form of Gestapo, no doubt very humanely directed in the first instance."

“And this would nip opinion in the bud; it would stop criticism as it reared its head, and it would gather all the power to the supreme party and the party leaders, rising like stately pinnacles above their vast bureaucracies of Civil servants, no longer servants and no longer civil.

“And where would the ordinary simple folk - the common people, as they like to call them in America - where would they be, once this mighty organism had got them in its grip?”

Winston Churchill, The First Conservative Election Broadcast, June 4, 1945.

"The inherent vice of capitalism is the unequal sharing of blessings; the inherent virtue of socialism is the equal sharing of miseries." -- Winston Churchill

"The Americans will always do the right thing... after they've exhausted all the alternatives." -- Winston Churchill

Death of Capitalism
The death of capitalism is greatly exagerated.

You can search America high and low and you won't find many socialists. The vast majority couldn't even define it.

Glenn Beck's hyperventilation is for ratings only. We have elections every 4 years in this country and the presidency and congress can change in an instant if people don't like the direction of our country.

Why I am not as optimistic!
This article is a brilliant depiction of historical trends and a must read for anyone who wants to know history. Yet, I am not as optimistic as Michael Medved is. As a former citizen of the former Soviet Union I know too well the extent of efforts that socialism would go to in order to preserve its power.
Karl Marx at least was honest. He openly admitted that socialism was impossible without brute force. He proclaimed that the "dictatorship of the proletariat" was the means to achieve socialist/communist goals.
The mordern days socialists try to obfuscate this fact. They pretend that they are "democratic". Yet, the speech police and intimidation is already in place. It took 34 years for Margaret Thatcher to start dismantling British socialism with so many conservative governments in those 34 years and even she was unable to finish the job. In 65 years since FDR's death his substitution of the constitutionally mandated small government with the big government is still in place despite the fact that in 36 of those years US had Republican presidents.
America also changed. In 25+ years since I came to this country there was a sea change in the attitudes of the Americans. Many of them now want government handouts, do not want to work hard. Whatever changes Obama and Democrats will put in place in the next few years will be with us for generations. And with the intimidation, speech police, political correctness, demagoguery they will be able to keep their grip on power. The era of Big Government is here! And there are very few prospects that it will become any smller in my lifetime!
It took 74 years for the Soviet Union to collapse. Do we want to wait that long?
That's why I am not that optimistic!

First predicts:
"Capitalism is in the process of being replaced because it has failed and Americans are not satisfied that they've been ripped off, work harder, yet fall further and further behind with more debt. That's why Republican crony Capitalists were landslided. They continue to cling to a failed ideology that is incompatible with the realities of the 21st. century. "

Capitalism once in a while will go through a reset. When this happens, as Mr. Medved points out, the socialists come out of the woodwork like cockroaches and start to make predictions about socialisms rise and capitalisms demise. However, since socialism is not a natural human condition, it never lasts long before it is swept back under the rug like the dirt that it is. It then sits there until the next time someone trips on the rug (capitalism being reset) and the dirt of socialism becomes evident again. Socialism must be implemented and kept by force of larger and tighter government rule. Eventually, the victims of socialism grow so tired of it that they throw it off. The danger there is that facism and dictatorships can rush in to fill the power vacuum and rule by brute force and impose tyranny. This is why the second amendment is needed and should never be taken for granted.

The Dance of the Death Knell Spiral

Capitalism will survive, but Smiley Face Fascism and Sugar Candy Socialism have always been engaged in the dance of the death knell spiral. Neither have ever prevailed over the long term and reconfiguring the tired, old, and failed recipes of two losers will always be bereft of fruit.


God o God o God
How has so many people been hoodwinked, why will such as you not study this issue before you commence missing the facts.

=======================

First Location:writes: - 7:18 PM EST
Crony Capitalism vs. Savior Socialism
We've seen both Democrats and Republicans cough up billions from taxpayers to bail out the corruption, incompetence, and off-the-books-gambling of Wall Street parasites and CEO's as they take millions in bonuses. Rick Wagonner from GM got a $20 Million dollar Bonus for being fired after he wrecked GM. Many on Wall street received HUNDRED OF MILLION$ IN BONU$E$ EVEN THOUGH THEY LOST MONEY FOR INVESTORS
=======================


WALL STREET
AND THE
BOLSHEVIK
REVOLUTION

By
Antony C. Sutton

http://www.reformed-theology.org/html/books/bolshevik_revo lution/

Truth is stranger than fiction

Wall Street, Bolsheviks and Monopoly
Marxism is based in a monopoly of Business and Government.

America has not had real free trade or real free enterprise in many years.

Slowly over time the Marxists/Monopolists have worked with Government to enact laws to destroy free enterprise.

Through high taxes, insurance, regulations, fees, permits, licence and a slew of laws that stop real competition in business unless one had a Bank full of Money.

And they have that sowed up, owning the entire financial system in the USA.

The Federal Reserve Banking System.

An independent business has inordinate power over our government and our economy, a complete monoply.

America has not had true free enterprise for many years.

Most people just cannot bring themselves to believe the connection between the monopolists on Wall Street and the Bolsheviks of Russia.

The bankers are behind the intentional destruction of the fiat paper banking notes we falsely call dollars.

They are not US Dollars, as a US Dollar is backed by Silver.

http://www.reformed-theology.org/html/books/bolshevik_revol ution/chapter_08.htm#THE%20FEDERAL%20RESERVE%20BANK%20OF%20 NEW%20YORK

The key to understanding
What has happened to America lays in understanding the power of the Federal Reserve Banking System.

A monopolist organization with its hands in both business and government

120 BROADWAY, NEW YORK CITY



William B. Thompson, who was in Petrograd from July until November last, has made a personal contribution of $1,000,000 to the Bolsheviki for the purpose of spreading their doctrine in Germany and Austria ....

Washington Post, February 2, 1918





With an almost unanimous lack of perception the academic world has described and analyzed international political relations in the context of an unrelenting conflict between capitalism and communism, and rigid adherence to this Marxian formula has distorted modern history. Tossed out from time to time are odd remarks to the effect that the polarity is indeed spurious, but these are quickly dispatched to limbo. For example, Carroll Quigley, professor of international relations at Georgetown University, made the following comment on the House of Morgan:

More than fifty years ago the Morgan firm decided to infiltrate the Left-wing political movements in the United States. This was relatively easy to do, since these groups were starved for funds and eager for a voice to reach the people. Wall Street supplied both. The purpose was not to destroy, dominate or take over...3

Professor Quigley's comment, apparently based on confidential documentation, has all the ingredients of an historical bombshell if it can be supported. We suggest that the Morgan firm infiltrated not only the domestic left, as noted by Quigley, but also the foreign left — that is, the Bolshevik movement and the Third International. Even further, through friends in the U.S. State Department, Morgan and allied financial interests, particularly the Rockefeller family, have exerted a powerful influence on U.S.-Russian relations from World War I to the present.

http://www.reformed-theology.org/html/books/bolshevik_revol ution/chapter_08.htm#THE%20FEDERAL%20RESERVE%20BANK%20OF%20 NEW%20YORK

Audit of Federal Reserve





213 cosponsors signed onto H.R. 1207, the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2009 that demands an audit of the organization.


Financial fix? Abolish the Fed
Constitution requires coin based on gold, silver...gold and silver backed certificates.

In just recent weeks, the federal government has designated billions of tax dollars for bank bailouts, including vast quantities to quasi-government agencies that helped create the economic crisis; billions more for automakers, and billions more for homeowners who default on their loans, so where will it end? Republican Rep. Ron Paul of Texas says he has at least part of the answer: abolish the Federal Reserve.

The congressman, a candidate for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, once again has introduced a bill that would get rid of the private organization that sets interest rates and establishes monetary priorities.

"Abolishing the Federal Reserve will allow Congress to reassert its constitutional authority over monetary policy," Paul said in a statement at the time the proposal was introduced.

http://www.wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=89412

Awesome!
Now that money, guided by those wretched beasts the World Bank and IMF, rules the world, the Babylonian Whore, America that is, shall soon be laid waste! Amen to that. Glory to the Lord!

The day of thy Mammon-serving covetous warmongering ways is nigh ended, and none too soon . . .

pax vobiscum

Obscenity
Medved's defense of capitalism is an obscenity coming from him. He does not now, nor has he ever believed in the free market. He has never, not once, supported a candidate who actually advocated real free market reforms. He claims to have supported Reagan but I doubt that it was active support.

He supported Bush I who gave us the Americans with Disabilities Act that compelled private employers to spend vast amounts of money on bathrooms and parking spaces that no one uses. The overall result was an increase in unemployment among the disabled.

He supported Bush II who gave us prescription drugs for seniors and had to "abandon free market principles" to "save" the market.

He supported John McCain, who never introduced any kind of free market oriented legislation but who did wholeheartedly support the bailouts and who has called for higher taxes.

The chair that Medved sits on is named after America's first anti-capitalist president - Theodore Roosevelt, who was a founder of the early 20th century proto-fascist Progressive movement, the very same movement that Hillary Clinton identifies herself with.

Today, after the tragic Holocaust Museum shooting, Medved took time to connect the 88 year old assassin with Ron Paul. Yes, Medved's idea of honesty is to bring Ron Paul into a discussion of anti-semitism inspired murder by mentioning that Storm Front, of which the assassin was a member, had raised money for Paul. That's how Medved treats actual believers in the free market. Ron Paul has many faults, but lack of support for a truly free market isn't one of them.

Medved and dozens of other former Democrats invaded and destroyed what Goldwater and Reagan tried to build. The Republicans are now hopelessly infected with fascistic ideas, it's time to secede from the Republican party.

Medved
Is a lot closer to Leon Trotsky than he ever was to Ronald Reagan

Medved
Is not worthy of shining Ron Pauls shoes.

Ron Paul, a real American Patriot

Baroness Thatcher
on socialism:

"The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of everybody else's money."


-Ray
NRA Life Member
Soli Deo Gloria!!

First @19
I haven't just 'visited' European countries, I have spent 20 years living there (3 in London, 17 in Germany), as well as traveling extensively throughout Europe during that period. Everything that you say regarding socialism vs capitalism is out and out BS.

The most telling error in your whole screed is the statement that European's "quality of life is better than for U.S. citizens". I can only presume that you 'gained' this knowledge by means of riding through town on a tour-bus and seeing the uniformed school children marching down the street all in line. You certainly didn't 'gain' the knowledge by living the life of a European.

Does this mean I hate Europe? Of course not, I loved every minute I lived there because I was young(ger) and happy with experiencing a new and different culture and people. I continue to return to Europe on a regular basis.

Capitalism Will Flourish, But Where?
We are loading ourselves with so much debt, capitalism may well be screwed in the United States.

American's EXCEL
So despite Der Black Fuhrer we will make it. I love the way this black conservative keeps Obama in check in his own small way http://theblacksphere.blogspot.com

A sane conservative?
Say it isn't so. I disagree with Medved on a lot, and I want a public health care option because I think it will be far more efficient and effective than the private insurance companies. (Not because I want to grow government.) But at least he sounds like a reasonable person here. What a refreshing change from the mindless, venomous rants from the likes of Limabugh and Hannity. Those guys are intentionally trying to destroy the US economy so that they can say I told you so. What destructive, juvenile, miscreants they are.

This economy is going to turn around soon. And when it does, Limbaugh and Hannity are going to be left with thousands of hours of tape to prove that they are nothing but insane demagogues. Their credibility will be zero. Medved will be one of the only conservatives pundits who will be able to show his face in public.

Mark my words.

Viva Capitalism!
Socialism, in attempting to provide equality for the masses comes with a price, the loss of individual freedom. Conversely, capitalism empowers individuals with freedom, and freedom is one of our most basic human desires. Irregardless of the type of government, there will never be equality of the masses simply because we are all different. However, under capitalism, people have gained the greatest degrees of equality. Armed with knowledge, people will alway choose capitalism and freedom over socialism and oppression. Time will prove that America's venture into socialism with Obama will be short lived.

Capitalism Works!
How does it work? By people being ingenuitive and working for themselves. Here's one way you can supplement your income and help local businesses. For if they close, we are in trouble, and I mean serious trouble.
Go to http://www.RasAdlink.net and find out how you can easily supplement your income, you won't get rich but every dollar earned counts.
http://www.RasAdlink.net

Merle - reply # 32
has it right.

This is why I think it so strange that Malcolm X said capitalism needed blood to suck to survive.

It is the socialists that do the blood sucking. They insist on living off the labor and investions of others. They condemn slavery, and then want to steal the fruit of another's labor for themselves.

Radicals such as Malcolm X always make statements that inflame others, but they never offer any proof or examples of what they mean. Exactly how does investing your own money in a business to develop a new product, hiring people to work in that business, and then charging enough money for that product to cover your expenses and provide a profit amount to "blood sucking"?

Liberals are always attacking the pharmaceutical industry. It takes decades to develop a new drug along with billions of dollars of investments, but liberals think the drug companies should then sell those same drugs for $5. In fact, they would probably complain this was too much. They really think the drugs should be supplied for free. If you put these free-loading liberals into this industry and told them to develop a life saving drug, they would complain you were asking them to do the impossible.

THESE are the real blood suckers.

Pscho de dumba$$
Yup! Let's let the government run everything so that you don't lose your cushy government gig, you leech!

Let's see how well you think it works when you or one of your loved ones is told that they can't have a life saving treatment or they have to wait for a couple of weeks until they die!

Move your worthless lib butt back to Iowa!

Michael is right
that capitalism, in some form, will probably always exist. The danger is that keeping the fruit of one’s own labor may disappear for the average person. And as government encroaches and represses, the opportunity to even labor at all will disappear for many as the rich hide rather than invest their wealth.

Those who would advance the socialist agenda will want to keep enough businesses profitable to enrich the elite, but the rest of society will be left with crumbs.

In socialist economies, there are always those at the top who live well. People who promote the socialist ideal and support the government get the plumb jobs, nice houses, comfy vacations etc. But the rest of the working class is there just to support them.

The trouble with disappearing liberty is that the more liberty is lost, the harder and harder it becomes to reclaim.

As socialism and government intrusion destroys prosperity, more people must turn to government to keep from starving. That fear keeps them reelecting those government figures who promise to take care of them. When someone is out of a job and no prospects are in sight, who will vote for someone who tells them to take responsibility for themselves and stop looking to government?

Dependence leads to dependence as we see with generation after generation in the same family who live off welfare.

For those who want universal care:
1. Just because you WANT free health care, you don't have a right to my or anyone else's money or (doctor's) time.

2. What makes you so confident the following below will not happen here?


Stop asking for antibiotics to cure coughs and colds, Government tells patients
- Daniel Martin, February 17, 2009 [Daily Mail(UK)]

Stroke services are 'UK's worst'
- February 17, 2009 [BBC]

Hospitals curb caesarean births
- Sarah-Kate Templeton, February 15, 2009 [The Times]

Only five out of 51 hospital trusts pass hygiene test, say inspectors
- Sarah Boseley, November 24, 2008 [Guardian Unlimited]

Top doctors slam NHS drug rationing
- Sarah-Kate Templeton, August 24, 2008 [The Times]

Heart patients dying due to poor hospital care, says report
- Sarah Boseley, June 8, 2008 [Guardian Unlimited]

NHS dentistry loses almost a million patients after new dentists' contract
- David Rose, June 6, 2008 [The Times]

Private healthcare managers could be sent to turn round failing NHS hospitals
- Philip Webster, Political Editor, and David Rose, June 4, 2008 [The Times]

Cancer patients ‘betrayed’ by NHS
- Sarah-Kate Templeton, June 1, 2008 [The Times]

NHS scandal: dying cancer victim was forced to pay
- Sarah-Kate Templeton, June 1, 2008 [The Times]

Pensioner, 76, forced to pull out own teeth after 12 NHS dentists refuse to treat her
- Olinka Koster, March 26, 2008 [Daily Mail(UK)]

Dental patients face care lottery
- March 26, 2008 [Metro(UK)]

Lung patients 'condemned to death as NHS withdraws their too expensive drugs'
- Jenny Hope, March 24, 2008 [Daily Mail(UK)]

European Elections
The recent elections in Europe merit attention. Is it possible that while we in America are turning more socialistic the Europeans are coming back to more conservative and capitalistic ideas?

I would like to see more discussion on this and more columns on the same by Medved and other Townhall columnists.

I believe that in the long run capitalism works much better than socialism. Mo system is perfect but as Medved has said we enjoy as a whole a much better way of life than centuries ago.

Socialists make the error of mistaking honest ambition and a desire for a better life for oneself and one's family for greed and selfishness. But what incentive is there in maintaining the lowest common denominator when imagination, inventiveness and hard work will help not just yourself but all society?

Thank you Mr. Medved for an intelligent and insightful(though long) article.

Wilson54
You nailed it!

Socialism has such a bad name in Europe that the people that represent that party, want to change the name to democrats! HAHAHA! Like that will help!

There is a member of the British Conservative Party of Parliament named Daniel Hannan that has been a guest of both Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck over the past few months. We need some people like him in our Congress. He took PM Gordon Brown to task for doing what osama is doing to our country. His speech has shown up on YouTube and it's definitely worth listening to him. I suspect that the Conservative Party will also be back in power in Great Britain come the next election.

Why does this sounds familiar:
“Capitalism didn’t tank the U.S. economy. Overbuilt housing did.” This sounds like, "guns don't kill, people do." In other words, overbuilt housing is somehow not the result of overzealous capitalism. The houses just decided somehow to build themselves!

It's nonsense like that that obscures the reality: We don't really know anymore what 'capitalism' means in the modern world. Very few of us are capitalists, in the sense that we earn our daily bread predominently through capital investments.

Most of us work for a living and depend for our livelihood on our salary or our pension (such as it is after the capitalists have squandered most of it). Granting that salaries are paid by corporate enterprises, the actual capitalism of those enterprises (i.e. its funding) has been severely weakened by incompetence and greed on the part of the real capitalists (i.e. the bankers).

The true basis for the American economic 'miracle' is 'incentives'. Hard work, innovation, and reliable products and services yield superior revenue for their providers. That's not 'capitalism', per se, it's called 'enterprise', and there's a difference. Capitalism may fund the enterprise, but it is secondary.


Gene
Loved reading your post

Well said

reply to Apollo
Very good documentation of Medved's intellectual dishonesty. His political support has never been given to genuine defenders of capitalism, and the liberal proposals (such as the Americans with Disabilities Act) have no place in a pro-capitalist agenda.

Medved praises capitalism when he likes what he believes its results to be, but is indifferent or hostile to it if he has other preferences. No real pro-capitalist can look at capitalism that way--capitalism is good and right, no matter what.

As for his historical analysis: he doesn't understand that business and government of necessity must be tightly knit together. No real businessman truly wants to be at the mercy of the free market, and will use his power to try to protect himself from it. The only genuine pro-capitalists are libertarian ideologues and academic economists. Successful businessmen know that they need government as a friend and protector; they pay for it and it takes care of them. Thus it has been from the earliest days of organized society, and thus it is now.

Here Medved
Here is what this man is doing for Americans.

Majority now cosponsors Ron Paul's Fed audit
Demand for transparency reaches 'crucial benchmark'

Less than 24 hours after WND reported a proposal from U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, R-Texas, to audit the Federal Reserve was approaching majority support in the U.S. House, he is confirming the plan has reached that "crucial benchmark."

"The tremendous grass-roots and bipartisan support in Congress for H.R. 1207 is an indicator of how mainstream America is fed up with Fed secrecy," Paul said shortly after U.S. Rep Dennis Kucinich, D-Ohio, became the 218th cosponsor, giving the plan, technically, majority support in the 435-member House.

http://wnd.com/index.php?fa=PAGE.view&pageId=100855

The rotten scheming thieving bankers are about to be exposed for the crooks they are.


What you ever done for America Medved?

Yet you slander this good man Ron Paul.

You are contemptible, sir.

Excellent article Mr. Medved
This is one of the more intellectual and well researched articles I've seen on townhall in a while.

I'm sure the basement dwelling liberal trolls are here as usual, but I won't dare besmirch this great article by attempting to argue with our inferiors. Trying to debate with them is like trying to tell your dog that you can't walk him because the house has just burned down. They don't get it, and they'll still want to go for a walk because they are on a intellectually inferior plane of existence.

Anyway, article will now be sent to all of my friends and associates, or at least the ones that prefer intellectual discussion instead of the typical hatemongering of the left.

Talent Scout
Did he insult Ron Paul? I didn't see that in the article. Well if so that really stinks; for the most part I think people that outright reject Dr. Paul's arguments are close minded and unable to keep up with his creative and unconventional approach to problems.

The article is still good though, sucks that the would disapprove of Dr. Paul....

Vincent, Dear...
"I think people that outright reject Dr. Paul's arguments are close minded and unable to keep up with his creative and unconventional approach to problems."
You do realize that so very generally labeling anybody who disagrees with someone is symptomatic of closeminded, backward thinking, yes? By your own statement you'd have to recuse yourself from membership in Dr. Paul's hallowed environs.

In 15 years Europe will not be socialist
it will be islamic by sheer force of numbers (Europeans 1 child per household, Muslims, 7) ..and then we'll see if our reigning president wants to impose the Koran on us...if we even have elected presidents still by then.

On the bright side we won't have to constantly hear about the magical superiority and enlightened sophistication of Europe.

Hey! Mikey! He likes it!
That was some cereal ad. I know for a fact that "I like it too" came from Irish Spring.
(speaking of capitalism, am I)

Mr. Moore, another Mikey, is fond of President Obama because he, too, buys into the beauty of the collective. Who wouldn't?

Grown-ups will return to the White House...sooner than many think. It may even be our sitting President, matured by the office itself.

As Bill Ayers would tell him, "you don't need a (W)eatherman to know which way the wind blows."

Silly Mr. Medved
Of course capitalism isn't dead. It's just "overtired" and needs a rest to recover from "nervous exhaustion."

Hey Jeannie
Can you name ONE socialist country in Europe? Just one, please. Too much to ask?

Obama's Chryslerization of America
I for one am not joining the Union. If you want to count on a decent retirement you have to build it yourself. Astonishingly, my left wing friends continue to rave about more government control while lamenting that Social Security will be bankrupt when need to collect it????

capitalism IS dead
Please. Just because we use the same name don't make it the same. Is "capitalism" in 2009 even vaguely similar to capitalism in 1909? Well? You can say that 1909 capitalism needed some reigning in but you can't say we have anything like the same system. Could people in 1909 even comprehend social security and medicare and medicaid and aid to dependent children as it exists today? They would understand better if you told them we could fly to the moon on regular commercial flights. That would be a normal growth of trends they could see and understand from their own time. The government as it exists today resembles theirs like a platypus resembles a zebra.
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